A Time Between

“We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope.”
– Martin Luther King, Jr.

There is probably no other person like MLK, Jr. who knew the bleak landscapes of injustice yet held the dream that “one day little black boys and girls would hold hands with little white boys and girls.”

The vision he held advances, retreats, surges ahead with each decade of good hearted and prayerful striving. It all takes place in the heart.

When kindness and reciprocity advance the cause of freedom and liberty, we lean in toward justice. Now is a time of avarice and hoarding in which we lean outward away from each other. Justice retreats.

Photo by Rahib Yaqubov on Pexels.com

Freedom loving Americans, stand by Lady Liberty. The midterms – if the institution holds together – are the next vital space where we can lean together toward justice, truth and a kind but firm righting of all we hold dear. Fear not but be vocal, hold hands and keep the dream of Liberty forever alight in your heart. Let us lean in together.

 

Why My Characters’ Zip Code Matters

Teenager_Boy_clip_art_mediumEnrique, a youth living in Tucson’s poorest neighborhood, begins his life with “the cards” stacked against realization of his dreams. Caught in a web of drug traffickers who recruit disadvantaged youth in his barrio, he navigates each day as one in a war zone with the goal to survive between sun up and sun down. Yet like each of us, he has innate potential that, under supporting circumstances, can change his life.

On the back stoop in the alleyway, he lit a cigarette, drawing deeply, breathing out a cloud, letting the afternoon sun warm his chest and arms. His thoughts turned to friends who had joined Bloods Southwest. He decided to talk to Pepe tomorrow at school. Then he went back inside to do his math homework. At least he could work numbers with no problem. He liked that math was governed by rules that never changed, and when he sought answers, he could always work them out.                                                ~ Threshold (2016), Fireship Press, Tucson, AZ

Research shows that a person’s zip code predicts how healthy they will be, how long they may live, what degree they may earn in school, and the size of their pay check. Your zip code can predict your chance of being obese, asthmatic, a drug addict or alcoholic, whether your baby is likely to be born prematurely or with a disability — and even how likely it is that you will live past age 5.

Where you live is a powerful determinant of your life outcomes. What’s more, your zip code may determine how resilient you can be as climate change advances.

How can we end this terrible injustice? Read Threshold to learn how characters find solutions.